Wooden Bomb

Did the RAF drop a wooden bomb on a German decoy airfield?

140

Claim: After the Germans constructed a phony wooden airfield as a decoy during World War II, the British sent a plane to drop a wooden bomb on it.

Status:Undetermined.

Example:[Reit, 1980]

Another enemy decoy, built in occupied Holland, let to a tale that has been told and retold every since by veteran Allied pilots. The German “airfield,” constructed with meticulous care, was made almost entirely of wood. There were wooden hangers, oil tanks, gun emplacements, trucks, and aircraft. The Germans took so long in building their wooden decoy that Allied photo experts had more than enough time to observe and report it. The day finally came when the decoy was finished, down to the last wooden plank. And early the following morning a lone RAF plane crossed the Channel, came in low, circled the field once, and dropped a large wooden bomb.

Origins: The

above-cited tale of military one-upmanship, about one group of combatants’ engaging in a defiantly symbolic gesture directed at their enemies (akin to the mostly true anecdote of American general Anthony McAuliffe’s responding to a German surrender demand at Bastogne during the Battle of the Bulge with the single word “Nuts”), is a well-traveled anecdote that dates to at least the first year of World War II. As far as we know, its earliest telling comes from CBS news correspondent William L. Shirer’s book, Berlin Diary: The Journal of a Foreign Correspondent 1934-1941, in which he recorded the following entry for 27 November 1940:

X tells me a funny one. He says the British intelligence in Holland is working fine. Both sides in this war have built a number of dummy airdromes and strewn them with wooden planes. X says the Germans recently completed a very large one near Amsterdam. They lined up more than a hundred dummy planes made of wood on the field and waited for the British to come over and bomb them. Next morning the British did come. They let loose with a lot of bombs. The bombs were made of wood.

Note that Shirer did not claim to have witnessed the event, or even to have heard about it directly from any of the participants; he merely repeated a humorous anecdote told to him by an unnamed source. We haven’t yet found any sources that document or provide more specific details about such an occurrence; all accounts of the putative “wooden bombing” of a decoy German airfield are apparently just retellings of the same brief description, each one altering to varying degrees and muddying the account’s pedigree even further (especially since even authors who cite the story as true acknowledge that multiple versions exist, such as one in which a British rather than a German airfield is bombed, a generally reliable sign that the tale originated in the realm of legend rather than

reality).

Could this story be true? The use of decoy airfields and other make-believe facilities during World War II was more than legend, of course; both the Germans and the Allies engaged in many such ruses (one of the most famous examples being the fictitious First U.S. Army Group [FUSAG] built up around General George S. Patton in England to mislead the Germans into believing the main Allied invasion of France would take place at the Pas de Calais rather than the beaches of Normandy). And dangerous missions were sometimes undertaken more for their psychological value than for their practical results (such as General James H. Doolittle’s bombing raid on Tokyo in April 1942). Still, several implausible aspects of this tale tend to place it far more in the “wartime morale-building joke” column than the “historical event” column:

Just as there is strategic value in fooling your enemy, there is also strategic value in allowing your enemy to continue believing he has you fooled even after you’ve caught onto his plans. That’s a considerable advantage to throw away merely for the sake of a minor “up yours” stunt.

William Shirer’s diary dates this anecdote to the days of the Battle of Britain, when England was battling Germany alone. (The Soviet Union and the U.S. would not enter the war against Germany until the following year.) Given that England needed all the airplanes and pilots they could muster in struggling for their survival against the German onslaught at home, they weren’t likely to have risked sending a number of both across the Channel on a mission to Holland that had no practical value.

The proposed scheme (particularly the version quoted at the head of this page, which posits the use of a single plane and bomb) is fraught with possibilities for failure that could easily have rendered it pointless. What if the Germans didn’t see the “bomb” fall from the plane? What if they watched it fall but didn’t know what it was, and it broke into unrecognizeable pieces when it hit the ground? What if it landed off-target and the Germans never found it? (And why not send someone along to film the event, thereby greatly increasing its propagandic value?)

Constructing a phony airfield “almost entirely from wood” would have been a rather extravagant waste of resources. Fake airfields like the one described here were intended to deceive those observing them from the air, not to be realistic to ground observers as well. Painted fabric stretched across plywood frames would have served just as well and could have been put together much more easily, cheaply, and quickly (and thus would have avoided the supposed delay that provided “Allied photo experts more than enough time to observe and report it”).

As charmingly inspiring as this tale of overmatched and outgunned underdogs defiantly thumbing their noses at the enemy may be, we can’t find reason to classify it as anything but fictional.